President Barack Obama isn’t the only one who promised incorrectly that anyone who wanted to keep their existing health plan under Obamacare could do so. Plenty of vulnerable House Democrats did, too, and their GOP rivalries are determined to make them pay for it in the 2014 midterms.

GOP strategists are digging through reams of old statements, videos, and other clips – all with the hopes of capturing Democrats offering the same faulty vow that’s landed Obama in a world of hurt.

The National Republican Congressional Committee has cataloged over a half-dozen Democratic incumbents in challenging races who previously said that people would be able to keep their plans. One is Minnesota Rep. Rick Nolan, who says on his official website that, “If you like the plan you have, you can keep it. And in fact, you’ll get a host of other built-in new consumer protections.”

Another is New York Rep. Tim Bishop, who once wrote in a message to his constituents: “A central feature of reform will be preserving the freedom to choose what works best for you and your family—if you like your doctor, keep your doctor. If you like your current plan, keep your current plan.”

And West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall was once recorded telling an audience: “Those who like their plan will be able to keep it.”

And this week, Oregon Rep. Kurt Schrader – who’s harshly criticized the president over the botched ACA rollout – found himself under fire from Republicans after it was revealed that language on the congressman’s website stating, “If you are insured and happy with your coverage, nothing changes,” had been deleted.

Republicans intend to use the statements in TV ads next year to clobber Democrats as untrustworthy – a strategy that Oregon Rep. Greg Walden, the NRCC chairman, telegraphed on Friday.

“You can’t get away from your votes, you can’t get away from your statements,” Walden told reporters at a breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor. “I think they’re in real trouble.”

Democrats scoff, arguing that they’ll have plenty of cover by the time the midterms roll around. On Friday, 39 Democrats - including Nolan, Bishop, and Rahall, and dozens of other vulnerable lawmakers – voted for the Republican-sponsored bill that would allow insurers to continue selling plans that were cancelled under Obamacare.

“When the law was passed by the Congress, the intention of the law was to ‘grandfather’ insurance plans that were in existence at the time of law’s passage. It is incredibly frustrating that individuals are losing policies that they want, even in the face of that congressional intent and understanding,” Rahall said in a statement. “That’s a big problem, and why I have voted to allow existing health insurance plans to continue into next year. I intend to keep pressing to see that the flaws in the program are fixed.”

Oliver Longwell, a spokesman for Bishop, said the congressman “voted for the Upton bill to ensure that consumers would continue to have access to current plans if insurers choose to offer them for 2014. He believes that satisfies the intent of Congress in including the grandfather clause in the law.”

And some Democrats contend that, after the president’s fix, whatever statements Democrats made in the past about Obamacare’s impact on existing plans won’t make much of a difference. Obama proposed Thursday allowing people to retain health care plans that don’t comply with the health care act’s benefit standards for another year — though his plan will require the cooperation of wary insurance companies, who would have to agree to extend the coverage.

“For consumers who want to keep their health care plans, President Obama has offered a commonsense fix – and Democrats worked hard to make sure that pledge is supported,” said Jesse Ferguson, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee deputy executive director. “Republicans are now being unmasked as dishonest after they doubled down rhetorically on the importance of helping Americans keep their plan – but opposed President Obama’s fix because of their knee-jerk ideological obsession with opposing everything with President Obama’s name on it.”